The Mercury

Japan issues warning to China

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TOKYO: Japan said yesterday it would respond firmly after Chinese government vessels intruded into what Tokyo considered its territoria­l waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea 14 times at the weekend, stoking bilateral tension.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Tokyo would continue to urge China not to escalate the East China Sea dispute, while also responding firmly and calmly.

Suga said the Chinese government vessels had entered “contiguous waters”, which could be policed for customs and immigratio­n violations.

Twelve Chinese vessels remained in the area yesterday, he said. Agencies including the Coast Guard would act together closely to deal with the situation, Suga said.

Chinese activity near the islands, known as the Senkaku in Japan and the Diaoyu in China, has heated up since Friday, prompting repeated Japanese protests, including three on Sunday alone.

About 230 Chinese fishing vessels were also in the area on Saturday, Japan’s foreign ministry said.

The incidents come amid heightened tension after an arbitratio­n court in The Hague invalidate­d China’s sweeping claims in the disputed South China Sea less than a month ago, in a case brought by the Philippine­s.

China has refused to recognise that ruling. Japan called on China to adhere to the verdict, which it said was binding. This prompted warnings from Beijing to Tokyo not to interfere.

On Saturday, China’s foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said China had indisputab­le sovereignt­y over the islands and nearby waters.

China accused Japan’s new Defence Minister, Tomomi Inada, of recklessly misreprese­nting history after she declined to say whether Japanese troops had massacred civilians in China during World War II.

Inada echoed Suga’s comments and said Japan’s military would conduct air patrols to provide informatio­n to its Coast Guard.

Ties between China and Japan, the world’s second- and third-largest economies, have been plagued by the territoria­l row, the legacy of Japan’s wartime occupation of parts of China and regional rivalry. – Reuters

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